Skip to main content

iMessage and FaceTime security boosted with extra layer of protection

apple boosts security for imessage and facetime how to use updated feature copy

Apple this week introduced an extra layer of security for Apple’s iMessage and FaceTime apps.

Similar protection, in the form of two-factor verification, was added to users’ iCloud and Apple ID accounts back in September shortly after a number of celebrities had their accounts hacked. At the time, Apple boss Tim Cook promised to improve security for his company’s products.

Recommended Videos

However, with iMessage and FaceTime, the situation is a little different. For these services, you’ll need to enter an app-specific password along with your usual login credentials next time you sign in to the apps. This will only be requested if you’ve already set up two-factor verification with your Apple ID account, something you should seriously consider doing if you haven’t already done so. You can generate an app-specific password by logging in to your Apple ID account at appleid.apple.com and hitting the ‘Password and Security’ button. 

Of course, the new security measures mean that another person attempting to sign in to iMessage or FaceTime from another device or machine will also be asked for this special password, though only you will have access to it.

Full instructions on setting up two-factor verification can be found here, and you can learn more about app-specific passwords here.

Related: How to pick a strong password

The extra layer of security should go a long way to keeping your accounts safe, so if you use Apple products and haven’t yet enabled two-factor verification, we highly recommend you take a few moments to set it up.

With so many people apparently continuing to use absurd passwords across multiple online accounts, and with hackers constantly sniffing around for opportunities to nab data, some sort of two-step security option is offered by most major online firms these days, among them Google, Microsoft, TwitterDropbox, and Facebook.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
You need to update your iPhone and iPad right now to fix a critical security flaw
iOS's App Library page shown on an iPhone 13 Pro.

This is a friendly -- and important -- reminder to update your iPhone and iPad, if you haven’t already.

Apple this week issued an urgent security update for iPhone and iPad owners to patch a flaw that could allow hackers to take control of the devices.

Read more
As a loyal iMessage user, I’m sick and tired of Apple’s resistance to RCS
Close up detail of a man iMessaging on an iPhone.

I’ve been an avid fan of Apple’s iMessage platform since it first came along in 2011, and there’s no doubt that Apple was way ahead of the curve in developing an integrated rich messaging system. But that doesn't mean the company's resistance to RCS today is justified by its earlier iMessage success.

While Google juggled a half-dozen different messaging platforms (it didn’t settle on Android Messages until 2017), friends and families with Apple devices enjoyed a stable messaging experience that evolved with each new iOS and macOS release. While iMessage may not have advanced quickly enough for everyone’s tastes — especially on the Mac — there’s no doubt that Apple had achieved a seamless “just works” solution for messaging between its own devices. It was similar to the experience that Apple delivered with FaceTime a year earlier.

Read more
Latest iOS 16 beta addresses rising safety concerns for message editing
Close up detail of a man iMessaging on an iPhone.

Apple has just released the fourth developer beta of iOS 16, and among the usual collection of bug fixes and performance improvements, the company has also taken some significant steps to help curb the potential abuse of its new iMessage editing feature.

When Apple unveiled iOS 16 at its Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) in June, it announced the update would bring the capability of editing and unsending iMessages sent through the Messages app. While this isn't an entirely new feature -- services like WhatsApp and Facebook have allowed folks to take back their sent messages for years -- Apple's implementation raised concerns among some domestic safety advocates.
What's changed in iOS 16 beta 4
With the release of the fourth developer beta of iOS 16, it appears Apple has taken those concerns to heart. The time frame to unsend a message has been reduced from 15 minutes to two minutes -- the exact change that attorney Simpson Tuegel recommended. In a letter she sent to Tim Cook, the survivor advocate pointed out that "a sender of such a message, in most situations, will immediately realize the error," so two minutes should be more than sufficient. More importantly, she adds, someone who intends to use iMessage "for bullying and harassment will face much greater risk if they know their messages become 'permanent' after two minutes."

Read more